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Kim Dong-jin
South Korean footballer (born 1982) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Kim Dong-jin (born 29 January 1982) is a South Korean football coach and a former professional footballer who played as a left full-back or wing-back. He is currently a coach of the South Korea national football team.[1]
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Club career
Kim started his professional career in Anyang LG Cheetahs (FC Seoul before 2004) in 2000, and spent his prime with them before joining Zenit Saint Petersburg. On 28 June 2006, he transferred to Zenit, following coach Dick Advocaat and Korean teammate Lee Ho. During his second season in Zenit, he helped his team to achieve their first Russian Premier League title by showing outstanding performance, and was named the second best left-back of the Russian Football Union.[2] However, he couldn't show his ability after suffering a leg injury in the middle of the next season. Furthermore, he had a sudden problem with the blood circulation of his brain, and Zenit finally terminated his contract on 26 January 2010.[3] He moved to Ulsan Hyundai and FC Seoul after other medical check-ups that found he was healthy enough to play,[4] but he couldn't settle there.
On 24 July 2019, Kim played Kitchee's friendly against Manchester City until being substituted in the 15th minute, and was handed a City shirt by Man City manager Pep Guardiola as strolling off the pitch.[5] After the match, Kim retired from playing career, and became a coach of Kitchee.[6]
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International career
He was South Korea's left midfielder in the 2004 Summer Olympics, and helped Korea finish second in Group A by scoring one goal (against Greece) and two assists (both against Mali), consequently advancing to the next round. However, they were stopped by the silver medalist Paraguay.
In 2004, Kim's performance against Germany while under Jo Bonfrère secured him the left-back or left midfield position (depending on the formation that was usually 4–3–3 or 3–4–3), which originally belonged to Lee Young-pyo. However, as Advocaat became the new manager of South Korea in November 2005, both Lee and Kim had to compete for the position. Since the two players proved to be highly influential to the national team,[citation needed] both players were rotated for the left back position during 2006 FIFA World Cup.
During the 2008 Summer Olympics, he was summoned to join South Korean under-23 squad as an over-aged player. Despite his solid performance and a winning goal scored in the last game against Honduras, his team was eliminated in the first round.
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Managerial career
On 29 September 2023, Kim was appointed as the interim head coach of Kitchee.[7]
Career statistics
Club
International
- Results list South Korea's goal tally first.
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Honours
Player
FC Seoul
Zenit Saint Petersburg
- UEFA Cup: 2007–08[12]
- UEFA Super Cup: 2008[13]
- Russian Premier League: 2007[14]
- Russian Super Cup: 2008[15]
Muangthong United
- Thai FA Cup runner-up: 2015[16]
Kitchee
- Hong Kong Premier League: 2016–17, 2017–18[17]
- Hong Kong FA Cup: 2016–17, 2017–18[18]
- Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield: 2016–17[19]
- Hong Kong Sapling Cup: 2017–18
- Hong Kong Community Cup: 2017[20]
South Korea U23
- Asian Games bronze medal: 2002[21]
South Korea
- AFC Asian Cup third place: 2007[22]
- EAFF Championship: 2003[23]
Individual
- K League All-Star: 2004, 2005[24][25]
- K League 1 Best XI: 2004[26]
Manager
Kitchee
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Notes
- Includes one appearance against non-national team, and six appearances and one goal as an overage player (three appearances and one goal in Summer Olympics, one appearance in Asian Games, two appearances in friendlies).
References
External links
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